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Thursday, February 11, 2021

Talk in Tuebingen: Individual differences in cue-weighting in sentence comprehension: An evaluation using Approximate Bayesian Computation

When: Feb 22 2021
Where: Universität Tübingen, Seminar für Sprachwissenschaft
How: Zoom

[This is part of the PhD work of Himanshu Yadav, and the project is led by him. Co-authors: Dario Paape, Garrett Smith, and Brian Dillon.]

Abstract
Cue-based retrieval theories of sentence processing assume that syntactic dependencies are resolved through a content-addressable search process. An important recent claim is that in certain dependency types, the retrieval cues are weighted such that one cue dominates. This cue-weighting proposal aims to explain the observed average behavior. We show that there is systematic individual-level variation in cue weighting. Using the Lewis and Vasishth cue-based retrieval model, we estimated individual-level parameters for processing speed and cue weighting using data from 13 published reading studies; hierarchical Approximate Bayesian Computation (ABC) with Gibbs sampling was used to estimate the parameters. The modeling reveals a nuanced picture about cue-weighting: we find support for the idea that some participants weight cues, but not all do; and only fast readers tend to have the predicted cue weighting, suggesting that reading proficiency might be associated with cue weighting. A broader achievement of the work is to demonstrate how individual differences can be investigated in computational models of sentence processing using hierarchical ABC.

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